This is likely a case wherein the whisky was fine, but the drinker's taste buds were not. So, I'd best do some disclaimers here:

1. Cragganmore distills a great spirit.

2. Master of Malt is one of the best online whisky retailers. Their Drinks by the Dram options have helped grandly expand my whisky world.

3. Their own bottlings have been quite good so far and I hope they keep it going!

4. Candidly, I probably flubbed this one. No one else's reviews show the quirk that I experienced. There just was a sensory misunderstanding between the malt and I. My only defense is that this was about a year ago, before I'd even started the Single Malt Report postings.

Ruben of WhiskyNotes has a good review of it here.
The Casks has an in-depth write-up on it here.
Gal at WhiskyIsrael also has a very positive post on it here.

This isn't one of my prouder malt moments, but I want to make sure that I share both the clarity and confusion in my whisky journey.

As this tasting was done over a year ago, perhaps I can chalk it up to a newbie tasting fail. I remember sitting there, staring at my Glencairn glass thinking, "Crap, I can't taste anything but table salt. Is that vanilla? No, that's more salt. Fruit? Nope, salt." And because no one else online has noted sodium chloride...and the bottler does consistent good work...and the distillery makes good stuff......that leaves one party with the issue.

This sort of thing happens from time to time. We aren't always in our best tasting shape, just like we're not always in our best biking shape or our best dancing shape. A stuffy nose, allergies, exhaustion, or just lack of focus can effect how receptors transmit information to the brain.

So, this was probably a decent dram. I encourage you to read the positive reviews that I linked to above. The 700mL bottles are sold out, but the samples are still for sale here. Master of Malt also put out a second Crag 1991 single cask release here.

I'll be reporting on another Master of Malt single cask release next week, and it's likely to be something quite different than this. We can all hope, right. ;-)